How many of you know how to start a fire?

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duragezic

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
11,234
4
81
I voted no because I thought you mean start a fire with friction etc. I'm not sure I could do that, maybe I could if the conditions were perfect, and I've watched a lot of Man vs Wild. :) With a lighter, no problem. I think I could do it with a flint and knife but I don't know for sure.
 

EMPshockwave82

Diamond Member
Jul 7, 2003
3,012
2
0
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel

And if all else fails, get the gas. :p

Congrats, you just set your face on fire because the settings were just right in the atmosphere and got yourself stuck in a gasoline flash.


Anything other than matches is cheating

Gas is unneccessary
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
72,838
33,887
136
Ever try to burn a Susie-Q or Twinkie? It can't be done.




Side note: FF's spell checker knows Twinkies but not Twinkie.
 

Locut0s

Lifer
Nov 28, 2001
22,205
44
91
Originally posted by: spidey07
Maybe it's the boy scout in me. But it really isn't that difficult. Is a fireplace that much of a foreign device? No "push button to light fire"?

Watching Survivor reality shows it's pretty clear. Folks just don't know how to start a fire.

So the question is in the Poll.

Your post fails because usually such a question refers to starting a fire without any supplies what so ever. A la lost in the woods survival guides. But you don't seem to mean this, you just mean how to start and keep a regular old fire going using matches, kindling and such. True a lot of people don't seem to know how to do even this properly, starting with dry grasses and kindling and the like then building up to larger pieces etc... But again first thing I thought of when reading your post is starting a fire with just 2 sticks.
 

adairusmc

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2006
7,095
78
91
Originally posted by: EMPshockwave82
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel

And if all else fails, get the gas. :p

Congrats, you just set your face on fire because the settings were just right in the atmosphere and got yourself stuck in a gasoline flash.


Anything other than matches is cheating

Gas is unneccessary

THats why you use diesel.

When I go hunting/camping, I always have a 5gal can of diesel with me. gets the fire started with no fuss.

None of that lighting kindling and waiting for the fire to get going to stay warm, just pour a few gallons of diesel on some good chunks of wood, and you have warmth in nothing flat.
 

Locut0s

Lifer
Nov 28, 2001
22,205
44
91
Originally posted by: adairusmc
Originally posted by: EMPshockwave82
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel

And if all else fails, get the gas. :p

Congrats, you just set your face on fire because the settings were just right in the atmosphere and got yourself stuck in a gasoline flash.


Anything other than matches is cheating

Gas is unneccessary

THats why you use diesel.

When I go hunting/camping, I always have a 5gal can of diesel with me. gets the fire started with no fuss.

None of that lighting kindling and waiting for the fire to get going to stay warm, just pour a few gallons of diesel on some good chunks of wood, and you have warmth in nothing flat.

Fail. I haven't been camping in years but when I did go a large part of the fun was the rustic feeling of getting things going yourself. Getting that fire started from just the small match and building it up with grass and kindling into a small crackling faire was exciting and part of the cozy experience of camping.
 

dighn

Lifer
Aug 12, 2001
22,820
4
81
Originally posted by: Locut0s
Originally posted by: spidey07
Maybe it's the boy scout in me. But it really isn't that difficult. Is a fireplace that much of a foreign device? No "push button to light fire"?

Watching Survivor reality shows it's pretty clear. Folks just don't know how to start a fire.

So the question is in the Poll.

Your post fails because usually such a question refers to starting a fire without any supplies what so ever. A la lost in the woods survival guides. But you don't seem to mean this, you just mean how to start and keep a regular old fire going using matches, kindling and such. True a lot of people don't seem to know how to do even this properly, starting with dry grasses and kindling and the like then building up to larger pieces etc... But again first thing I thought of when reading your post is starting a fire with just 2 sticks.

me too! with a ligher/other ignition sources how hard can that be?! now building a fire from nothing but rubbing wood or striking stones, that takes some skill!
 

Leros

Lifer
Jul 11, 2004
21,867
7
81
Originally posted by: Locut0s
Originally posted by: adairusmc
Originally posted by: EMPshockwave82
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel

And if all else fails, get the gas. :p

Congrats, you just set your face on fire because the settings were just right in the atmosphere and got yourself stuck in a gasoline flash.


Anything other than matches is cheating

Gas is unneccessary

THats why you use diesel.

When I go hunting/camping, I always have a 5gal can of diesel with me. gets the fire started with no fuss.

None of that lighting kindling and waiting for the fire to get going to stay warm, just pour a few gallons of diesel on some good chunks of wood, and you have warmth in nothing flat.

Fail. I haven't been camping in years but when I did go a large part of the fun was the rustic feeling of getting things going yourself. Getting that fire started from just the small match and building it up with grass and kindling into a small crackling faire was exciting and part of the cozy experience of camping.

I agree. If the fire isn't start from kindling, then it loses some of the rustic feel of camping. Last time we went camping, it turned out our logs were slightly wet. I spent about 30 minutes with dry grass and twigs trying to get those logs to catch. Took forever, but it was worth it.
 

EMPshockwave82

Diamond Member
Jul 7, 2003
3,012
2
0
Originally posted by: Leros
Originally posted by: Locut0s
Originally posted by: adairusmc
Originally posted by: EMPshockwave82
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel

And if all else fails, get the gas. :p

Congrats, you just set your face on fire because the settings were just right in the atmosphere and got yourself stuck in a gasoline flash.


Anything other than matches is cheating

Gas is unneccessary

THats why you use diesel.

When I go hunting/camping, I always have a 5gal can of diesel with me. gets the fire started with no fuss.

None of that lighting kindling and waiting for the fire to get going to stay warm, just pour a few gallons of diesel on some good chunks of wood, and you have warmth in nothing flat.

Fail. I haven't been camping in years but when I did go a large part of the fun was the rustic feeling of getting things going yourself. Getting that fire started from just the small match and building it up with grass and kindling into a small crackling faire was exciting and part of the cozy experience of camping.

I agree. If the fire isn't start from kindling, then it loses some of the rustic feel of camping. Last time we went camping, it turned out our logs were slightly wet. I spent about 30 minutes with dry grass and twigs trying to get those logs to catch. Took forever, but it was worth it.

Originally posted by: EMPshockwave82
Anything other than matches is cheating
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
I didn't start the fire, it was always burning.



.....drat, beaten to it. First reply, no less. I searched for "always" and didn't see it in the thread.

Oh well.



I can start fires only with matches, magnifying lenses, a lighter, or with fine wires and a battery.
I've never attempted it with any of the old, old, old fashioned ways.

 

Paladin3

Diamond Member
Mar 5, 2004
4,933
878
126
I?ll preface this by saying, yes, I know how to start a fire properly, with a single match, using kindling, a bit of paper or lint and then slowly adding larger and larger pieces of wood. I could probably even do it with flint and steel if I had too, but using one of the assorted friction methods for the spark would be challenging.

Now, here is my camp fire story.

I took the family camping once and we arrived late in the day and it was windy and cold up on the mountain. My wife and daughters were tired from the drive, so I figured I?d start them a fire to stay warm around while my son and I set up camp.

Being in a hurry, I splashed camping fuel on some logs and tossed in a match. After 30 seconds of roaring flames, the wind was threatening to blow the fire out, so I did what any other idiot would do. I uncapped the can of fuel and splashed a bit more on the fire. Ahh, instant warmth and I happily turn to toast my back side.

That?s when I noticed the can of fuel I was still holding had a small blue flame coming out of the top. Time stops and I dumbly admire the pretty blue flame, thinking ?huh, that?s something you don?t see every day.? I scream like a girly-man and drop the can. Fuel splashes up and flames momentarily fill the air. Frantically, I start kicking dirt on the can trying to put it out, but only succeed in kicking it over and spreading fuel and flames to the base of a nearby pine tree. At this point terror pretty much sets in and I officially fly into frantic idiot mode.

Kick, kick, kicking more dirt on the fire, alternating between the flaming can of fuel and the blazing tree. I scream at my wife and kids to get back in the minivan, thinking that if this goes bad we can make a quick getaway. For the next few dirt-flinging seconds my mind reels with fears of burning down the tree, a full-blown forest fire, the state billing me for the cost of putting the fire out, death by exploding camping fuel can, winning my very own Darwin Award. The next 15 seconds seems like a lifetime.

I finally get the can uprighted and extinguished. The battle is half won. The wind is blowing so hard that the tree itself isn?t actually burning yet, just the fumes from the spilt fuel making those pretty blue flames. But how much longer can that last? I kick more dirt on that fire and get it out too, and, thank God, the tree doesn?t even have a burned mark on it. Whew, chalk up another victory for dumb luck!

Idiot?s joy then sets in. You know, that wonder and embarrassing sense of having escaped unscathed from really, really terrible fate caused by your own stupidity. That?s when I hear my wife yell, ?Your boot is on fire!? Yup, there they are again, more of those pretty blue flames coming from the toe of my boot. I start dancing around with a self-induced Mexican hotfoot to the sound of my daughter crying.

I bathe my boot in another shower of dirt and finally get the last of the flames out. Looking around the camp I?m amazed that there is almost no sign of damage other than a bit of soot on the end of my boot. I escape the incident with third degree burns to my pride and a new found respect for the mandatory warning labels on flammable liquids.
 

Insomniator

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2002
6,294
171
106
lol at "what the hell is kindling"

I can only start a fire because of my fireplace, I wouldn't expect or see any reason for someone without one to know how to do it. Except camping or scouts.
 

JohnCU

Banned
Dec 9, 2000
16,528
4
0
Originally posted by: Paladin3
I?ll preface this by saying, yes, I know how to start a fire properly, with a single match, using kindling, a bit of paper or lint and then slowly adding larger and larger pieces of wood. I could probably even do it with flint and steel if I had too, but using one of the assorted friction methods for the spark would be challenging.

Now, here is my camp fire story.

I took the family camping once and we arrived late in the day and it was windy and cold up on the mountain. My wife and daughters were tired from the drive, so I figured I?d start them a fire to stay warm around while my son and I set up camp.

Being in a hurry, I splashed camping fuel on some logs and tossed in a match. After 30 seconds of roaring flames, the wind was threatening to blow the fire out, so I did what any other idiot would do. I uncapped the can of fuel and splashed a bit more on the fire. Ahh, instant warmth and I happily turn to toast my back side.

That?s when I noticed the can of fuel I was still holding had a small blue flame coming out of the top. Time stops and I dumbly admire the pretty blue flame, thinking ?huh, that?s something you don?t see every day.? I scream like a girly-man and drop the can. Fuel splashes up and flames momentarily fill the air. Frantically, I start kicking dirt on the can trying to put it out, but only succeed in kicking it over and spreading fuel and flames to the base of a nearby pine tree. At this point terror pretty much sets in and I officially fly into frantic idiot mode.

Kick, kick, kicking more dirt on the fire, alternating between the flaming can of fuel and the blazing tree. I scream at my wife and kids to get back in the minivan, thinking that if this goes bad we can make a quick getaway. For the next few dirt-flinging seconds my mind reels with fears of burning down the tree, a full-blown forest fire, the state billing me for the cost of putting the fire out, death by exploding camping fuel can, winning my very own Darwin Award. The next 15 seconds seems like a lifetime.

I finally get the can uprighted and extinguished. The battle is half won. The wind is blowing so hard that the tree itself isn?t actually burning yet, just the fumes from the spilt fuel making those pretty blue flames. But how much longer can that last? I kick more dirt on that fire and get it out too, and, thank God, the tree doesn?t even have a burned mark on it. Whew, chalk up another victory for dumb luck!

Idiot?s joy then sets in. You know, that wonder and embarrassing sense of having escaped unscathed from really, really terrible fate caused by your own stupidity. That?s when I hear my wife yell, ?Your boot is on fire!? Yup, there they are again, more of those pretty blue flames coming from the toe of my boot. I start dancing around with a self-induced Mexican hotfoot to the sound of my daughter crying.

I bathe my boot in another shower of dirt and finally get the last of the flames out. Looking around the camp I?m amazed that there is almost no sign of damage other than a bit of soot on the end of my boot. I escape the incident with third degree burns to my pride and a new found respect for the mandatory warning labels on flammable liquids.

:D :laugh: :thumbsup: with a hint of NuclearNed-like storytelling ability
 

l0cke

Diamond Member
Dec 12, 2005
3,790
0
0
I went to YMCA of the Rockies for this thing in 8th grade and the guides there had no clue what they where doing. They started out with way too many logs, then once they got it going they threw more on top. It started to go out, so they put even more on.

My computer happens to be right next to a fireplace that I start a fire in if it gets too cold.
 

irishScott

Lifer
Oct 10, 2006
21,562
3
0
Yes. I'm in the University Outing Club, so I get some practice. :) Haven't successfully started one in the snow yet though (well, started yes but couldn't get it to catch anything significant).
 
Feb 19, 2001
20,155
23
81
Kindling, yeah. We old fogies with scouting experience used to start fires at our fraternity. It was hilarious to watch this semester when the young ones had to dump oodles and oodles of lighter fluid and still couldn't get a damn campfire going. Pathetic. They couldn't even get the grill going either.
 

DrPizza

Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Mar 5, 2001
49,601
167
111
www.slatebrookfarm.com
I start fires all the time. Used to have a wood stove & had to start fires in that. Went from nothing to raging inferno inside in minutes.

But, now I have a coal stove. I'd bet that 90% or more of the people here couldn't start a coal fire (anthracite). I've struck out with MAPP gas! The coal laughs at the torch on my propane tank. I'd like to go back in time and ask the first guy, "how'd you figure out that it burns??" Once it's lit, it gives off a LOT of heat. But, pita to light it.
 

BUTCH1

Lifer
Jul 15, 2000
20,433
1,769
126
No, I don't know how, I'm not the "outdoorsy" type, I refuse to go camping until someone makes a tent with cable.